i've wonder what does the handspring add to the move? does it make the cutter more impactful?

____________________After thinking about it for a long while but my decision had been made, I am officially leaving the site. I have too much on my hand with work, my very sick dad and such I have no more time for this site. Of course I will be on Facebook now and then. One day I might return but for now, I'm not good with goodbyes, so hello.

On a related note, the Springboard Cutter is Lethal's finisher? That's the move everyone says is so shit? Does he do it awfully or something? Because there's someone in Lucha Underground who does it and I think the move is great. I marked when it was added to the WWE games.

TJ was clowning around and Dead had to continue with his hate for Jay Lethal

Lethal's move is way to flashy. He's doing too much and it doesn't make the move he's doing more impactful. I don't know if you were in the Skype call where TJ and I had a debate over who had the worse finisher in wrestling right now. It's clearly Del Rio

the handspring cutter imo is good as a counter from being irish whipped into the ropes. But standing up again and he woobles for a few seconds as someone does the handspring spring is kinda meh.

____________________After thinking about it for a long while but my decision had been made, I am officially leaving the site. I have too much on my hand with work, my very sick dad and such I have no more time for this site. Of course I will be on Facebook now and then. One day I might return but for now, I'm not good with goodbyes, so hello.

I remember seeing people on reddit complain about how Dean does his rebound lariat horribly and he should learn from Nigel Mcguinness. Then I saw a video of Nigel doing it, and aside from the rebound itself, Dean's clothesline looks wayyyyyy better than Nigel's shitty forearm tap.

Del Rio's finisher is good, he just sets it up horribly. I saw someone else do it, i think Low Ki, and his set up worked well. He stepped on the opponent's knee, forcing them to instinctively pull themselves up and into position, instead of Del Rio's, where the opponent just pulls themself into position to die for no reason.